The movie gave me a sense of confusion. When I watched it, I felt that all of this was actually fake. CRS didn't want to kill him, because the place where it wanted to drown him was actually given the puzzle props in advance; when Nicholas was stunned in the cabin, if If they really took money, they could actually kill him directly, but they just buried him alive in another area, so it can be speculated that they didn't want the protagonist to die. But in the end, when CRS told Nicholas that it was a birthday surprise, it seemed to me that it all ended too lightly, as if the birthday surprise that ended was also a hoax. In the whole movie, it seems that everyone's words are so convincing, but it seems that everyone's words are so unwilling to believe that the deception in the movie not only brings the protagonist himself, but also has the role of me of the audience. The heroine in particular, she kept lying, kept lying, and not every word was true, so much so that in the end I couldn't believe what she said when she was getting ready to get into the cab at all. The film brings more psychological oppression. At the end, it is impossible to distinguish what is the truth and what is the truth.
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